Title: The Age of Reform
1Chapter 24
- The Age of Reform
- 1791 - 1911
2Section 1 Liberal Reform in Great Britain and
Its Empire
- Women fought hard for the right to vote and were
often arrested - The Industrial Revolution brought wealth and
power to Great Britain - Also brought inequalities
- Liberalism supported govt protection of
individual rights and civil liberties - Suffrage the right to vote
3- Trouble with voting property ownership, voting
in the open change is demanded, mainly by
workers and the middle class - Many new voters are in existence
- Slavery was abolished in all British colonies in
1833 - People want universal male suffrage and secret
ballot
4- People want money for members of Parliament so
average ppl could afford to enter politics - Queen Victoria had the longest reign in English
history 63 years called the Victorian Age - She had 2 very important Prime Ministers during
her reign
5Benjamin Disraeli
- Interested in guiding foreign affairs and
expanding the empire
6William Gladstone
- Concerned mainly with domestic and financial
affairs - Many reforms
- Education Act of 1870 creates national
elementary education system - Irish Question and home rule
7Misc.
- Aborigines Australia victims of new diseases
and British ideas of racial superiority - 1893 New Zealand became the first country in
the world to grant women the right to vote
8Section 2 Expansion and Reform in the United
States
- Major issues slavery, expanding territory,
states rights - Growth (1788) United States was made up of 13
states and had pop. of almost 4 million. (1900)
United States had grown to almost 4xs original
size and pop. of about 60 million.
9Northwest Ordinance (1787)
- Settlers in new land would have same rights as
original citizens - 5,000 males have its own legislature
- 60,000 ppl adopt a constitution and apply for
statehood
10The expansion of The U.S.Territory
How obtained Date
States created
11Civil War
- North Industry South Agriculture
- New Territories Slavery?
- Secede South Carolina Confederate States of
America - Total War enemys military and civilian
resources were targets for destruction - South lacked troops and industrial output
12- More than 600,000 died
- Emancipation Proclamation
- Victory
- Freedom did not necessarily ease the lives of
former slaves - Impact on the Indians in the movement Westward
13Civil War Amendments
- 13th Amendment abolished slavery in all states
- 14th Amendment gave former slaves citizenship
rights and equal protection under the law - 15th Amendment right to vote cannot be denied
due to race or former enslavement
1419th Amendment (1920)
- Gave the right to vote to women
15Section 3 Revolution and Reform in France
- The French continued their long fight for
political and social change. - Louis XVIII died in 1824, his brother Charles X
became King of France. - Charles X believed in absolute monarchy and
abolished most of the liberal reforms. - When the French people revolted in July 1830
Charles X gave up his throne
16- New King Louis Philippe member of the Bourbon
family who they thought to be liberal. - Louis Philippe was King of France, but one
approved by the French Parliament - Citizen King he called himself this to win
the support of the people
17- Louis Philippe faced opposition
- Food shortages and unemployment between 1846 and
1848 heightened tensions and discontent - LP took away some freedoms
- LP will abdicate and leave for England
- Need for a new leader
18- A president would be elected for one, four year
term a republican form of government - Voters chose Louis-Napoleon, the nephew of
Napoleon Bonaparte - He wants to serve more than one term and so he
takes matters into his own hands - Plebiscite allows him to stay in power gets a
10 year term - He wants to restore the empire of his uncle
19- Become Napoleon III
- Authoritarian regime
- People lost many rights
- Newspapers censored and shut down
- Liberal university professors lost jobs
- No freedom of speech
- No organization of political opposition
20Crimean War
- Russia claimed authority over certain holy places
in Palestine - France disputed this claim
- 1854 France, Great Britain, and Ottoman Empire
form alliance and declared war on Russia - The Crimea
21- Both sides suffered massive losses
- Two important developments modern field
hospitals and professional nursing corps - France wins Crimean War
- France then turns to forming a colonial empire
22Florence Nightingale
- By the end of the first year in the Crimea, the
mortality rate had decreased from 42 to 22
because of her reforms in hygiene and the
supplies she donated. - Before her death in 1910, she received the
British Order of Merit for her work.
23Franco-Prussian War
- Otto von Bismarck head of Prussian govt
- Decided war with France would help him unite the
German states - Disaster for France
- Napoleon III took control of the army and was
captured - Prussians invaded France and began a siege of
Paris - January 1871 Paris fell war was over
24Treaty of Frankfurt
- Forced France to give up either all or part of
Alsace and Lorraine - Large payment to Germany
25Give Peace A Chance
- French people wanted peace and elected people who
would vote to accept peace. - This ticked off the people in Paris
- They set up a council to govern the city called
the Commune member were Communards - French govt at Versailles wanted to disarm the
Parisians
26- Troops enter Paris and fight Communards street to
street - Communards were defeated
- Constitution of 1875 made France a Republic.
Stood for nearly 75 years - Anarchists Opposed all govt
27Dreyfus Affair
- Accused and convicted of giving French military
secrets to Germany - Dreyfus, who was Jewish, was sentenced to life
even though evidence existed that he was innocent - When real traitor was discovered the Army clears
him as opposed to admit wrong doing
28- In 1906 Dreyfuss name was cleared
- Coalition political groups organized to support
a common cause
29Section 4 Latin American Independence Movements
- Inspired by Revolutions in North America and
France - Independence movements swept the entire region
from Mexico to tip of S. America - Distinct colonial life in Latin America developed
and thrived - Mercantilism the royal outlook on the colonies
was that they were designed to benefit the home
country and its ruler at colonial expense
30- Haciendas large, self-sufficient farms that
produced a variety of goods - Rancheros (p. 624)
- American Indians were used as slaves farm
workers, miners, servants - As the Indian population decreased and the need
for labor increased African slaves were imported
31Social Gap Increases
- Peninsulares European born (Iberian Peninsula)
- Creoles white people born in the colonies
- Mestizos American Indian/European ancestry
- Mulattoes African/European ancestry
- African and Indian
- By the 1700s the majority of colonial population
was of mixed ancestry - Rules were passed that barred Mestizos from
priesthood, universities, most political offices,
and most prestigious craft guilds
32- Taxes to help pay for Spains European wars
caused bitter resentment in the colonies - The hatred that the Peninsula has inspired in us
is greater that the ocean between us
33Haitis Slave Revolution
- Slaves and Mulattoes joined together (1791) under
Toussaint-Louverture a freed slave - This was the only successful revolution led by
slaves anywhere in the world - Haiti becomes the first independent country in
Latin America
34Leaders of the Fight in Spanish South America
- 1. Simon Bolivar
- Nicknamed the Liberator
- Bolivia named in his honor
- 2. Jose Francisco de San Martin
- His success in moving his entire Army through
10,000 12,000 ft mountain passes to cross the
Andes in Jan and Feb 1817 is ranked alongside
Hannibals legendary crossing of the Alps in 218
BC as one of the greatest military maneuvers in
history. - Benardo OHiggins
35- Brazil got independence without war
- Portugal lost its entire empire Spain held only
Cuba and Puerto Rico
36Monroe Doctrine
- Spain tries to regain its lost colonies in 1820s
- United States takes notice
- Monroe Doctrine (1823) US would oppose any
attempts by European nations to take back former
colonies, create new ones, or interfere with any
govt in the hemisphere - This upsets the Europeans but they listen
37Last Points
- Slavery was abolished throughout Latin America by
1888 - With the growth of industry and trade many
nations began to achieve stability and economic
growth
38Question
- Why would uprisings originate among the Creoles
and not among the lower classes? - The frustration of the powerful Creole class and
lower classes inability to sustain a Revolution
39Chapter 25 Nationalism In Europe 1806 - 1913
40Cyrus Hall McCormick
- Manufactured grain reapers in Chicago in the late
1840s. - Before the reaper a farmer with a sickle could
harvest only about half an acre of wheat per day. - With a McCormick reaper 2 people could harvest 12
acres a day
41- Nationalism became a driving force for change in
Italy, Germany, Russia, and other European
regions. In this chapter you will read about
those developments and what effects they had on
the people and political futures of those
countries.
42Section 1 The Unification of Italy
- What factors might contribute to or detract from
a desire for national unification? - Contribute common culture, ancestry,
traditions, language, customs, history, folk
tales, holidays, religion, art, literature,
music - Detract different economic interests,
regionalism.
43- Conquest by Napoleon had unified Italy for a
brief time. - However, the Congress of Vienna again divided
Italy into several large and small states - Nationalism continued to grow
- Nationalists could not work openly and had to
form secret societies
44- Neither Pope nor King but rather a republic
should rule Italy. - Cavour wanted Sardinia to lead the way in uniting
and industrializing Italy. - He increased Sardinias political influence by
siding with France and Great Britain during the
Crimean War.
45- Cavour saw Austria as the greatest barrier to
Italian unification. - Kingdom of the Two Sicilies southern Italian
Peninsula and island of Sicily - Man names Garibaldi comes to the forefront
- Garibaldi was celebrated for military skill
- He spent 12 years in S. America learning the art
of guerrilla warfare - During 1860 the people in Italy except Venetia
and Rome - had plebiscites and voted for national
unity
46Section 2 The Unification of Germany
- We want Germany to be considered one land and
one people. - Germany a patchwork of independent states
- Napoleon I Dominated Prussia for 7 years
- Napoleon I limited size of the Prussian Army
and forced money and soldiers to France - Austria was Prussias greatest German rival
47- German economy began to move towards unification
- 1861 William I became King of Prussia
- The next year he appointed Otto von Bismarck to
lead the Prussian cabinet - Bismarck opposed democracy and the idea of a
Parliament - He thought the state should hold all authority
48Bismarck
- The great question of the day will not be
settled by speeches and majority decisions that
was the great mistake of 1848 and 1849 but by
blood and iron. - Hoped that successful foreign policy would calm
an increasingly hostile public - Always against any form of popular govt
- He does help create a strong Germany a major
power!!!
49Realpolitik
- Used to describe an artful, shrewd approach to
politics that completely disregards ideology - Bismarck was the master of this style
- Ex. he collected taxes w/o parliamentary
approval, ignored the Constitution, edited the
telegram from the King, provoked wars to help
German unification
50Machiavellianism
- Can be summarized by the often-quoted statement
The end justifies the means. - Rulers should maintain their power by whatever
means necessary
51Seven Weeks War
- Prussia vs. Austria
- Shocked the world at the modern approach to
warfare movement by train, communication with
the telegraph, modern weaponry - Shifted the balance of power in Europe
52Franco-Prussian War
- Prussian victory
- Provoked France into declaring war on Prussia
- 18 January 1871 German representatives met in
the Hall of Mirrors at the Palace of Versailles
and declared the formation of German Empire
53Structure
- Kaiser emperor, head of govt, commanded
military in war, could declare defensive war w/o
approval appointed Chancellor and Bundesrat - Chancellor under Kaiser, over legislature
- Bundesrat federal council approved or vetoed
budgets - Reichstag legislative assembly, approved
military budgets every seven years
54Section 3 Opposition to Bismarck
- Liberal ideas led to the fall of Bismarck and an
increase in popular representation in govt - Constitution gave the people little voice
- Dissatisfied groups formed political parties that
opposed Bismarcks policies - Bismarck was increasingly forced to attend to
their demands
55- Kulturkampf culture struggle -
anti-Catholic program. Bismarck was
Protestant - Ended in failure in 1887
- Bismarcks govt and leadership helped the growth
of industry
56- Germany was able to industrialize more rapidly
and efficiently by building on the innovations of
other nations - Bismarck pushed through laws that prohibited
newspapers, books, or pamphlets from spreading
socialist ideas - He banned public meetings of socialists
- Bismarck decided to grant many of the reforms the
socialists proposed so that fewer people would
have reason to support the socialists
57- William II comes to power in 1888
- He believed in absolute authority of the emperor
brings him into conflict with Bismarck - When Bismarck offered his resignation as a threat
William II accepted it - Germany had become a major power!!!
58Section 4 Reform and Revolution in Russia
- In the 1800s liberal ideas from Western Europe
stirred up unrest among the Russian people - Russian industry lagged
- Ports were blocked by ice for much of the year
and exits from the seas were controlled by other
countries
59- Russia is vast in land and variety among its
people national groups, languages - Such diversity in ethnic, national, and religious
groups made unification difficult - The czar ruled the huge Russian Empire as an
autocrat one who holds absolute power
60- Russia had struggled with the influence of the
West - Nationalistic ideas appealed to the ethnic
minorities Poles, Finns - Russification forced non-Russian people in the
empire to use the Russian language, accept the
Orthodox religion, and adopt Russian customs in
place of their traditional ones.
61- Russia wanted to increase its influence among the
Slavic peoples under Russian leadership - Russia promoted Pan-Slavism The union of all
Slavic peoples under Russian leadership. - Expansion southward was halted due to the defeat
in the Crimean War - The Ural Mountains
62- Russia would first notice how backwards it was
with their defeat in the Crimean War - Serfs in Russia were bound to people and not to
the land - Emancipation Edict issued in 1861 by Alexander
II frees all serfs - It is better to abolish serfdom from above than
to wait until the the serfs begin to liberate
themselves from below.
63Alexander II
- Alexander II limited the powers of the secret
police, gave the press greater freedom, and
expanded education. - He also reorganized the military, reducing the
period of active service from 25 years to 6
years. - Radical activity made Alexander II more
conservative . - After an attempt on his life in 1866, he
repressed radical groups but continued his
reforms - He was assassinated in 1881.
64Reforms Die With Alexander II
- The assassination of Alexander II ended liberal
reforms and led to an era of intense repression - Successors were not open at all to liberalism
after all, look at what happened to the man who
tried to help the people Alexander II - Pogroms riots in which Jews were massacred
- The Russian governments attempt to block all
change produced an explosive situation
651905
- Russo-Japanese War Russia lost again showed
that Russia was behind in many areas - Bloody Sunday 22 January 1905 czars troops
shot unarmed people as they peacefully marched to
deliver a petition - There were mutinies in the army and navy
- The Revolutionary movement of 1905 failed to
overthrow the czar - The autocracy continued to resist change and use
repressive measures to preserve their 1000-year
old monarchy
66Section 5 Unrest in Austria-Hungary
- By 1848 the uprisings in France had set off
revolts in almost every other European nation - When France sneezes, all Europe catches cold
- Hungary was one of the largest parts of the
Austrian Empire - A strong nationalist movement centered on
throwing off Austrian rule and making the Magyars
dominant in Hungary.
67- After its defeat by Prussia in 1866, Austria
responded to Hungarian demands for independence
in 1867 by forming the Dual Monarchy also
called Austria-Hungary. - Austria and Hungary each had their own parliament
- Each provided a market for the other
68- Ethnic minorities such as the Czechs, Slovaks,
Serbs, Croats, Romanians, Poles, Slovenes,
Ukrainians, and Italians existed in both Austria
and Hungary. - Balkans have very strategic location where
Europe and Asia meet - Map on p. 654
69- By the 1800s the once-powerful Ottoman Empire had
declined a great deal - Russia supported the Balkans and saw the chance
to exploit the weakening Ottomans - Russia stood to gain a water route from the Black
Sea to the Mediterranean Sea if the Ottoman
Empire collapsed. - Great Britain did not want to see the Russians in
the Mediterranean
70- Due to the increased Russia influence in the
Balkans the Congress of Berlin was held in 1878 - Great Britain got the island of Cyprus as a naval
base in the Mediterranean - 1912 and 1913 2 Balkans Wars took place
- Serbia had growing hostility toward Austria and
this greatly heightened political tension in the
Balkans
71The End